Vol. 1 No. 1 (2025): June

Published: 2024-02-21


Articles

Deciphering The Determinants Of Public Debt In The Gambia: Evidence From Autoregressive Redistributed Lag (Ardl) Bound Cointegration Analysis

The accumulation of public debt, a pervasive global phenomenon, has spurred intense debate in academic and policy circles, particularly regarding its determinants in developing countries. While some scholars attribute public debt accumulation to internal factors such as poor debt management and

Ousman Kebba Sanyang, Bakary Mamadou Bah

1-15

Capital Allocation, Risk Management, And Efficiency In Cameroonian Banking: A Tripartite Analysis

Cameroon, a member of the Community of Central African States (CEMAC), underwent significant financial reforms in the 1990s, prompted by the economic and banking crisis of the late 1980s and the pressures of the International Monetary Fund (IMF) as part of the structural adjustment program

Jean-Pierre Ngong Mbassi, François-Xavier Tchatchoua Nana

16-34

Inequality And Urban Poverty: A Case Study Of Goba Town, Bale Zone, Oromia, Ethiopia

The global population has witnessed a dramatic shift towards urbanization, with over half of the world's inhabitants now residing in metropolitan regions, a significant increase from 30% in 1950. Projections indicate that this trend will continue, with urban dwellers expected to constitute 66%

Mesfin Abate Alemu, Almaz Worku Tadesse

35-60

Assessing Corporate Preparedness: Implementing Psak 69 Accounting Standards In Agriculture

The objective of this research is to analyze the readiness of Accounting Standards for Agriculture (PSAK 69) that should be implemented for 2018 financial statements in Agro Industry Company in Jember and Probolinggo, Indonesia. Qualitative Method has been employed in this research with

Prasetyo Widodo Budi

61-67

Demystifying The Holding Period Return: A Simple Explanation

The concept of holding period return (R) is a fundamental measure in finance, representing the ratio of future proceeds to the initial investment. For bonds, this calculation is defined as R = (B1 – B0 + iF)/B0, where Bt denotes the bond valuations at time t, iF represents interest payments at

Anderson James William

68-70